EXHIBIT A
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN
MILWAUKEE DIVISION Charles Collins, et al.,
Plaintiffs, v.
City of Milwaukee, et al., Defendants.
Case No. 17-cv-00234-JPS
SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT AND COURT ORDER
I. INTRODUCTION
A. Plaintiffs’ Claims 1. This class action lawsuit for declaratory and injunctive relief was filed on
February 22, 2017, against the City of Milwaukee (“Milwaukee”), the Milwaukee Fire
and Police Commission (“FPC”), and in his official capacity Alfonso Morales, the Chief
of the Milwaukee Police Department (“MPD”)1 (hereinafter referred to individually and
collectively as “Defendants”) by named plaintiffs Charles Collins, Caleb Roberts,
1 Plaintiffs’ Class Action Complaint and Amended Class Action Complaint named as a defendant Edward Flynn in his official capacity as Chief of the MPD. Amended Class Action Complaint for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief ¶ 27 (May 24, 2017), ECF No. 19 (“Am. Compl.”). Due to the retirement of Edward Flynn on February 16, 2018 and subsequent appointment of Alfonso Morales as Chief of the MPD, Alfonso Morales is automatically substituted for Edward Flynn as a defendant sued in his official capacity pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 25(d).
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Stephen Jansen, Gregory Chambers, Alicia Silvestre, David Crowley, Jeremy Brown, and
Dallas Adams (hereinafter referred to individually and collectively as “Plaintiffs”).2
Plaintiffs allege that Defendants’ policies, practices, and customs related to stops and
frisks by the Milwaukee Police Department (“MPD”) violate the United States
Constitution by: (1) authorizing MPD officers to stop people without individualized,
objective, and articulable reasonable suspicion of criminal conduct, in violation of the
Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution; (2) authorizing MPD officers to frisk people
without individualized, objective, and articulable reasonable suspicion that the person is
armed and dangerous, in violation of the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution; and
(3) sustaining stops and frisks of Black and Latino people that involve racial and ethnic
profiling, or are otherwise motivated by race and ethnicity, rather than reasonable
suspicion of criminal conduct, in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S.
Constitution and Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S. § 2000d et seq. (“Title
VI”).
B. Defendants’ Response
1. Defendants deny that their policies, practices or customs related to stops
and frisks by the MPD violate the United States Constitution, and, in particular, the
Defendants deny that they: (1) authorized MPD officers to stop people without
individualized, objective, and articulable reasonable suspicion of criminal conduct, in
violation of the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution; (2) authorized MPD officers
2 Plaintiffs and Defendants are from time to time referred to hereinafter individually as a “Party” and collectively as the “Parties.”
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to frisk people without individualized, objective, and articulable reasonable suspicion that
the person is armed and dangerous, in violation of the Fourth Amendment to the U.S.
Constitution; and (3) sustained stops and frisks of Black and Latino people that involve
racial and ethnic profiling, or are otherwise motivated by race and ethnicity, rather than
reasonable suspicion of criminal conduct, in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to
the U.S. Constitution and Title VI.
C. Mutual Recognition of Principles
1. The Parties to this Settlement Agreement and Court Order (“Agreement”)
recognize the need for compliance with the requirements and mandates of the Fourth and
Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution in the conduct of MPD stops and frisks.
Accordingly, the Parties have agreed to the following binding provisions of this
Agreement.
II. STANDING OF INDIVIDUAL PLAINTIFFS
1. The Parties further agree that this Agreement shall be enforceable by the
named individual Plaintiffs and that Defendants shall not object to standing, and that
Defendants further will not object to the substitution of individual plaintiffs for the
presently-named individual Plaintiffs during the time set forth below for the continuing
jurisdiction of the Court.
III. DEFINITIONS
1. A “stop” is defined as a police encounter with a civilian in which, taking
into account all of the circumstances surrounding the encounter, the police conduct would
have communicated to a reasonable person that he or she was not at liberty to ignore the
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police presence and go about his or her business. See McGann v. Ne. Ill. Reg’l Commuter
R.R. Corp., 8 F.3d 1174, 1184–85 (7th Cir. 1993).
2. For purposes of this Agreement, a “traffic stop” is defined as a stop of a
driver or passenger in a vehicle that results in a warning, citation, summons, or arrest for
a traffic or vehicle equipment offense.
3. For purposes of this Agreement, a “field interview” is defined as any stop
of a person by an MPD member, other than a traffic stop, in which a member obtains a
person’s name or identification, and questions that person about that person’s actions or
behavior. MPD documents may interchangeably refer to a “field interview,” “Terry
stop,” or “subject stop.” Solely the term “field interview” will be used in this Agreement.
a. A “vehicle field interview” is a field interview of a driver or passenger in a
vehicle.
b. A “pedestrian field interview” is a field interview of a person who is not a
driver or passenger in a vehicle, including but not limited to, people walking
or otherwise moving on foot, cyclists, and people moving in assistive devices,
such as wheelchairs.
4. For purposes of this Agreement, a “no-action encounter” is defined as any
situation in which an MPD member briefly questions a person about that person, or that
persons’ own actions or behavior, but does not obtain the person’s name. A no-action
encounter may include, but is not limited to, a situation in which an officer initially
believed that there was reasonable suspicion or probable cause but quickly determined
that there was not, and did not obtain that person’s name. “No-action encounters” include
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situations in which the person is a driver or passenger in a vehicle, a cyclist, or is walking
or otherwise moving on foot or moving in assistive devices, such as wheelchairs. A “no-
action encounter” shall not be considered a “traffic stop” or “field interview,” but shall be
documented in the Computer Aided Dispatch (“CAD”) system in accordance with section
IV.A. of this Agreement.
5. A “frisk” is defined as a protective pat down to find weapons that a police
officer reasonably believes or suspects are in the possession of the person who has been
subjected to a stop. See Adams v. Williams, 407 U.S. 143, 146 (1972) (citing Terry v.
Ohio, 392 U.S. 1, 24 (1968)). For purposes of this Agreement, any police encounter with
a member of the public involving a “frisk” shall be documented pursuant to the
procedures detailed in paragraph IV.A.2 for the documentation of “traffic stops” or “field
interviews” as appropriate based on the circumstances of the frisk.
6. A “search” is defined as the examination of a person’s body, property, or
other area that the person would reasonably be expected to consider as private by a police
officer for the purpose of finding evidence of a crime. For purposes of this Agreement,
any police encounter with a member of the public involving a “search” shall be
documented pursuant to the procedures detailed in paragraph IV.A.2 for the
documentation of “traffic stops” or “field interviews” as appropriate based on the
circumstances of the search.
7. For the purposes of this Agreement, the “Consultant” shall be Crime and
Justice Institute and shall implement the roles and responsibilities of the Consultant as set
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forth in this Agreement.
IV. POLICIES
1. Defendants shall ensure that all MPD traffic stops, field interviews, no-
action encounters, and frisks are conducted in accordance with the rights protected by the
Constitution and laws of the United States and are carried out with fairness and respect.
2. Defendants shall require that all MPD traffic stops, field interviews, and
no-action encounters are supported by individualized, objective, and articulable
reasonable suspicion of unlawful conduct. Reasonable suspicion is evaluated “based on
the totality of the circumstances known to the officer at the time the stop is
made.” United States v. Uribe, 709 F.3d 646, 650 (7th Cir. 2013). Consequently, there
may be instances in which an officer has individualized, objective, and articulable
reasonable suspicion when initiating the encounter, but subsequent developments
establish that the subject of the encounter is not or has not engaged in criminal activity or
a traffic or vehicle equipment offense.
3. Defendants shall require that all MPD frisks are supported by
individualized, objective, and articulable reasonable suspicion that an individual is armed
and poses a present danger to the officer or a member of the public.
4. Defendants shall prohibit MPD officers from relying to any degree on an
individual’s race, ethnicity, national origin, religion, gender, age, gender identity or
expression, sexual orientation, immigration status, limited English proficiency, disability,
or housing status to establish reasonable suspicion or probable cause, in the absence of a
specific suspect description.
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5. Subsequent to events complained of in this lawsuit, Defendants have
announced generally to the members of the police department that there are no formal or
informal quotas, or other numerical benchmarks, for traffic stops, field interviews, frisks,
searches or arrests. In addition to maintaining their written policies continuing to prohibit
quotas and other numerical benchmarks, Defendants will repeat this policy during all
MPD training programs concerning traffic stops, field interviews, no-action encounters,
frisks, searches, and/or arrests, including, but not limited to, training for new police
officers and re-training for officers identified through supervisory review, the complaint
process, and/or EIP to have conducted unlawful traffic stops, field interviews, no-action
encounters, frisks, searches, and/or arrests.
6. The number of traffic stops, field interviews, no-action encounters, frisks
and/or searches by any officer, squad, District, or other subunit of MPD, shall not be used
as a performance indicator or in any other way to evaluate performance.
7. Subject to the required process for proposal of amendments to MPD
Standard Operating Procedures (“SOPs”) and FPC approval, Defendants shall revise
MPD policies and guidelines to make clear that officers shall not rely solely on
generalized categories to determine individualized, objective and articulable reasonable
suspicion or probable cause, including solely the: (1) “appearance or demeanor” of a
person, (2) the “hour of the day or night,” or (3) the alleged “inappropriate presence” of a
person “in a neighborhood.” These categories can be used in combination with other
legally appropriate factors not articulated in this agreement to determine reasonable
suspicion or probable cause.
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8. Defendants shall maintain the MPD policies which already make clear that
the principles and constitutional standards set forth in paragraphs IV.1–7 apply to all
traffic stops, field interviews, no action encounters, frisks, and searches conducted by
MPD personnel, regardless of the tactical or strategic policing strategy being
implemented. The Parties agree that these principles and standards apply in situations
including, but not limited to, an MPD officer who conducts a pretextual stop; engages in
a directed or saturation patrol; participates in Data-Driven Approaches to Crime and
Traffic Safety; serves as a member of the Neighborhood Task Force; polices in any so-
called “high-crime area,” “hotspot,” or “flare spot”; identifies an alleged “commonly
stolen vehicle”; engages in any “broken windows” or similar policing strategy; and/or
enforces low-level offenses, including, but not limited to, enforcement related to parking
and equipment violations and municipal ordinance violations.
9. Defendants shall revise their policies and practices concerning directed
and saturation patrols, including SOP 300–Directed Patrol Mission, to provide proper
guidance to officers about the specific actions officers are expected to take in a directed
or saturation patrol in order to achieve patrol objectives, and to clearly prohibit traffic
stops, field interviews, no-action encounters, and frisks that are unsupported by the
requisite reasonable suspicion or are based on race, ethnicity, national origin, or another
prohibited characteristic identified in paragraph IV.4.
10. To effectuate the principles and constitutional standards addressed in
paragraphs IV.1–8, Defendants shall prepare the proposed revised policies detailed in this
paragraph through procedures that conform with the requirements of Wisconsin State
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law, and shall ensure that these proposed revised policies are ready for submission to the
FPC for final approval within ninety (90) days of entry into this Agreement. Defendant
Morales, with the City Attorney as appropriate, shall recommend that the FPC enact the
proposed revised policies discussed herein. If the FPC does not enact any of the
proposed revised policies prepared pursuant to this paragraph, the Parties and the
Executive Director of the FPC shall meet and confer with each other to prepare another
revision to the proposed revised policies for submission to the FPC for enactment.
a. Defendants agree to amend MPD SOP 001 – Fair and Impartial Policing, as
shown in the redlined document attached to this Agreement as Appendix A.
b. Defendants also agree to work with Plaintiffs to amend the following MPD
SOPs within sixty (60) days of entering into this Agreement to reflect
provisions of this Agreement that pertain to policies, procedures, guidelines,
and standards addressed in these specific SOPs. Should the Parties be unable
to reach agreement, they agree to submit their proposed changes to Judge
Lynn Adelman for his recommendation. Any of the following are subject to
the process prescribed by Wis. Stats. § 62.50(3) for FPC approval in accord
with its rules:
i. SOP 085–Citizen Contacts, Field Interviews, Search and Seizure;
ii. SOP 300–Directed Patrol Missions / Saturation Patrols;
iii. SOP 440–Early Intervention Program;
iv. SOP 450–Personnel Investigations;
v. SOP 730–Mobile Digital Video / Audio Recording Equipment;
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vi. SOP 747–Body Worn Camera; and
vii. SOP 990–Inspections.
11. To effectuate the principles and constitutional standards addressed in
paragraphs IV. 1–8, Defendants agree to formally withdraw the following MPD policy
document: Memorandum No. 2009-28, “Traffic Enforcement Policy,” Mar. 3, 2009. See
Appendix B.
12. All MPD non-supervisory officers assigned to the patrol bureau and
engaged in patrol operations who conduct traffic stops, field interviews, no-action
encounters, frisks, and searches shall wear body-worn cameras.
13. MPD shall require that all patrol officers activate both body-worn cameras
and mobile digital video recording devices at the initiation of any traffic stop, field
interview, no-action encounter, frisk, or search, and shall not deactivate the cameras until
the encounter has concluded, with specific exceptions to protect privacy rights as set forth
in amended SOP 730–Mobile Digital Video Audio Recording Equipment, and amended
SOP 747–Body Worn Camera. When a non-supervisory officer is transferred to a patrol
assignment, MPD shall ensure that the member is provided with equipment necessary to
comply with this paragraph within three (3) weeks.
14. Defendants shall recruit, hire, and promote a diverse corps of police
officers at all levels of the chain of command to reflect the diversity of Milwaukee
communities. FPC will update the promotional testing procedures for positions subject to
such testing to include questions and activities testing a candidate’s ability to lead and direct
community policing efforts.
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A. Data Collection and Publication
1. Defendants shall ensure that every traffic stop, field interview, no-action
encounter, frisk, and search conducted by any member of the Milwaukee Police
Department is documented in an electronic, digitized record regardless of the outcome of
the encounter (e.g., citation, arrest, warning, or no action at all).
2. The electronic records concerning each traffic stop, field interview, no-action
encounter, frisk, and search shall be documented in one of the following systems: the
Traffic and Criminal Software (“TraCS”); the Records Management System (“RMS”); or
the Computer Aided Dispatch (“CAD”) system. Defendants shall promulgate clear
guidelines delineating the type(s) of encounter(s) (e.g., traffic stop leading to a traffic
citation, traffic stop leading to no action, field interview leading to a warning)
documented in each electronic database. Defendants shall ensure that:
a. all traffic stops are documented in TraCS;
b. all field interviews are documented in RMS;
c. all no-action encounters are documented in CAD; and
d. all frisks and searches are documented in either TraCS or RMS as appropriate,
based on the whether the circumstances of the frisk or search are appropriately
characterized as a traffic stop or field interview.
Defendants shall make clear when duplicate records exist within or between TraCS,
RMS, and CAD.
3. Whether stored in TraCS, RMS, or CAD the electronic, digitized record for
each traffic stop, field interview, and no-action encounter shall include all of the
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following information:
a. demographic information about the subject, including: (i) age; (ii) gender; and
(iii) race and ethnicity selected from one or more categories in the following
list: American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian, Black or African American,
Hispanic or Latino, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, and/or White;
i. in RMS, TraCS, and CAD, compliance will require maintenance or
creation of “hard fields” that will contain the demographic information
identified above, with the sole exception that officers are not required to
document the age of the subject in no-action encounters recorded in
CAD;
b. the location of the stop, including the address and police district;
c. the date of the encounter;
d. the start time of the encounter;
e. a written narrative explaining the legal basis for the stop, as follows:
i. in RMS: textual entry into a narrative field;
ii. in TraCS: textual entry into a narrative field;
iii. in CAD: transcription of officer’s communication with dispatch
concerning basis for the traffic stop into a narrative field;
f. whether a frisk (i.e., protective pat down) was conducted and a written
narrative of the legal basis therefor;
g. whether a search beyond any frisk was conducted of the person or his or her
effects, and if so, a written narrative explaining the legal basis therefor;
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h. whether any contraband, including weapons, was found during any frisk
and/or search and if so, the type of contraband seized, which shall be
designated as follows:
i. in RMS: selection of one or more of the following options from a drop-
down menu: “firearm weapon,” “non-firearm weapon,” “drugs,” “stolen
property,” “other,” and “none”; and
ii. in TraCS: selection of one or more of the following options from the
existing drop-down menu: “illicit drug(s)/paraphernalia,”
“intoxicant(s),” “weapon(s)”; “evidence of a crime,” “stolen goods,”
“excessive cash,” “other,” “none.”
i. whether the encounter resulted in a use of force, and if so, the type/level of
force used and the stated justification for why the officer used force, with the
information captured in a Use of Force Report in the Administrative
Investigative Management System (“AIM”) referencing the same CAD
number as the corresponding record in RMS (field interviews), TraCS (traffic
stops), or CAD (no-action encounters);
j. whether the encounter resulted in no law enforcement action, a warning,
citation, summons, or arrest, and if so, the violations, offenses, or crimes
alleged or charged with the information captured as follows:
i. in RMS, in a drop-down menu permitting selection of one of the
following options: “no law enforcement action,” “citation,” “warning,”
“summons,” “arrest,” and “none”, and with a description of the
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violations, offenses, or crimes alleged or charged in a narrative field;
ii. in TraCS, through documentation of traffic stops leading to traffic
citation, non-traffic citation, or warning in the applicable TraCS module,
with a description of the violations, offenses, or crimes alleged or
charged in a narrative field;
iii. in CAD, the C-code outcome for “no action” shall be documented in a
field designated for the inclusion of such information for no-action
encounters.
k. any relevant suspect description received by police prior to the encounter for
any field interview documented in RMS only; and
l. the names and identifying numbers of all officers actively involved on the
scene during the encounter.
Defendants shall ensure that each traffic stop, field interview, and no-action encounter
documented pursuant to this paragraph—whether in RMS, TraCS, or CAD—is assigned
a unique stop identification number.
4. A system will be created, if none currently exists, to ensure that all of the
required information detailed in paragraph IV.A.3 is properly inputted into RMS, TraCS,
and CAD.
a. For example, the user interface of RMS may be set up to require the entry of
information detailed in sub-paragraphs IV.A.3(a), (c), (e), (f), (g), (h), (i), and
(j) into the electronic, digitized record in order for a traffic stop, field
interview, or no-action encounter (and any frisks or searches conducted during
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the course of the encounter) to be documented in the system. If a user fails to
submit a piece of required information (e.g., race of the traffic stop subject),
the user interfaces of RMS shall prohibit submission of the record.
b. Alternatively, a separate script may be run on records submitted to the back
end of each system every day in order to identify incomplete records and
email officers and their supervisors to resubmit the forms when they are
incomplete.
5. There shall be a unique identifier (i.e., primary key) that bridges TraCS, RMS,
and CAD in order to permit analysis of all traffic stops, field interviews, no-action
encounters, frisks, and searches of a specific individual regardless of the database in
which the information is stored. For example, the unique identifier may consist of a
name and date of birth. Plaintiffs offer the assistance of data scientist Kathy Qian at no
cost to Defendants to assist in the configuration of TraCS, RMS, and CAD so that a
unique identifier is assigned to each subject of a traffic stop, field interview, no-action
encounter, frisk, and search documented in each data system (TraCS, RMS, and CAD).
6. There shall be an identifier that permits direct correlation between every
traffic stop, field interview, no-action encounter, frisk, and search recorded in TraCS,
RMS, and CAD and any video associated with the encounter, whether captured through
police-vehicle video camera footage and/or officer body-worn camera footage. This data
field may consist of a unique encounter identification number, for example, created
through the date and time of the encounter.
7. The MPD database(s) of video footage from police-vehicle cameras and body-
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worn cameras shall be searchable by CAD number with video to be produced one
incident at a time, with such searches available for both types of video within one year
from the date of this Agreement. Video footage concerning traffic stops, field interviews,
no-action encounters, frisks, and searches shall be easily and quickly made available to
the Consultant upon request, and no later than 7 calendar days from the date of the
request.
8. Defendants shall require that any MPD officer who conducts a traffic stop,
field interview, no-action encounter, frisk, or search complete and file a report or the
information, including at least all of the information identified in paragraph IV.A.3, prior
to the end of his or her tour of duty. If extenuating circumstances make that impossible,
the report or information must be completed prior to end of the next tour of duty.
Defendants shall require that, if multiple officers are involved in conducting a traffic
stop, field interview, no-action encounter, frisk or search, at least one officer shall
complete said report.
9. Defendants shall prohibit MPD from collecting, storing, disseminating, and/or
publishing personally identifiable information about an individual who has been
subjected to a traffic stop, field interview, no-action encounter, frisk, and/or search in any
criminal intelligence database (with the exception of TraCS and RMS) if that individual
is released without further legal action, unless MPD documents specific facts supporting
individualized, objective, and articulable reasonable suspicion that the individual is
involved in criminal conduct or activity and the information is relevant to that criminal
conduct or activity. See 28 C.F.R. §§ 23.3, 23.20. The defendants will not destroy
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properly documented records in TraCS and RMS.
10. Defendants shall ensure that MPD provides, on a quarterly basis, the
electronic, digitized data on all traffic stops, field interviews, no-action encounters, frisks,
and searches described in paragraph IV.A.3, with the exception of any personally
identifiable information, to the FPC, Plaintiffs’ counsel, and the Consultant. Defendants
shall also provide explicit identification of primary keys, foreign keys, constraints, and
indices in order to identify how the TraCS, RMS, and CAD datasets or tables link
together and what types of duplicates can be expected. To the extent that any unique
identifier (i.e., primary key) includes personally identifiable information, that unique key
shall be transformed so that it is not readily readable.
11. Defendants shall ensure that MPD provides to the FPC, Plaintiffs’ counsel,
and the Consultant the manuals for police officer and supervisor use of TraCS, RMS, and
CAD including examples aimed at clarifying the procedure for inputting into each system
all of the information identified in paragraph IV.A.3 about traffic stops, field interviews,
no-action encounters, frisks, and searches recorded in the system.
12. Defendants shall ensure that MPD provides to the FPC, Plaintiffs’ counsel,
and the Consultant the codebooks and data dictionaries for users of TraCS, RMS, and
CAD that clearly define every variable captured in records of traffic stops, field
interviews, no-action encounters, frisks, and searches, as well as all values that each
variable can be assigned.
13. Defendants shall ensure that the FPC will publish on its website, on an annual
basis, the electronic, digitized data on all traffic stops, field interviews, no-action
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encounters, frisks, and searches described in paragraphs IV.A.1–3, with the exception of
any personally identifiable information. The FPC will also post on its website any and all
reports published by the Consultant pursuant to the Agreement.
B. Training
1. Defendants shall review and revise if necessary training materials for
officers and supervisors on the policies, procedures, and constitutional requirements for
conducting a traffic stop, field interview, no-action encounter, frisk, and search, and the
ways that race, ethnicity, national origin, and other characteristics identified in revised
SOP 001 can and cannot properly be used. See Appendix A. All training sessions for
MPD officers and supervisors on these standards shall be taught by an instructor qualified
under Wisconsin law in the following specified areas:
a. Defendants shall adopt procedures to ensure that all officers are able to
articulate, verbally and in writing, the constitutional standards for
individualized, objective, and articulable reasonable suspicion and probable
cause in conducting a traffic stop, field interview, no-action encounter, frisk,
and search, and will provide appropriate remedial training where any officer is
unable to do so. MPD will develop a training bulletin for all MPD officers
reinforcing the requirements for a traffic stop, field interview, no-action
encounter, and frisk, including with respect to establishing reasonable
suspicion for the stop, field interview, or any frisk, which shall be reinforced
through roll call training conducted by supervisors.
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b. Defendants shall continue the training begun in 2013 in fair and impartial
policing through a program developed by Lorie Fridell, Ph.D and A. T.
Laszlo. Plaintiffs shall review the substance of this training program within
six (6) months of the execution of this Agreement and shall suggest revisions
or additions to this training program. Said suggestions are to be incorporated
into the training program only upon the approval of the aforementioned
program developers, or by similarly-qualified individuals retained for that
purpose by MPD. Similarly qualified individuals will include certified MPD
trainers trained by Fridell or Laszlo. Similarly qualified individuals will also
include trainers trained by Fridell or Laszlo, retained by MPD.
c. Defendants and/or the trainers shall include testing or other mechanisms to
ensure the content of the training is learned by participating MPD staff.
d. MPD will require and train supervisors to ensure accuracy of traffic stop, field
interview, no-action encounter, frisk, and search records documented pursuant
to this Agreement, and to regularly review and analyze such records for
patterns of individual officer, unit, and squad conduct to identify at an early
stage trends and potential bias-based behaviors, including but not limited to
racial and ethnic profiling and racial and ethnic disparities in the rates of
traffic stops, field interviews, no-action encounters, and frisks made without
sufficient legal justification. Supervisors will be provided training developed
by Lorie Fridell, Ph.D and A. T. Laszlo on identifying trends and patterns that
give rise to potentially biased practices regarding traffic stops, field
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interviews, no-action encounters, frisks, and searches of people and vehicles.
Such training will be delivered by qualified individuals, who may include
certified MPD trainers trained by Fridell or Laszlo, or by other certified
trainers trained by Fridell or Laszlo and retained by MPD. Such training will
be consistent with the aforementioned training on fair and impartial policing.
2. Within twelve (12) months of the execution of this Agreement, and on an
annual basis thereafter, MPD shall provide training for all MPD staff who conduct,
supervise, document in TraCS, RMS, or CAD, and/or audit traffic stops, field interviews,
no-action encounters, frisks, and searches. If Defendants show good cause for the need
for an additional six months to complete this training, Plaintiffs will not unreasonably
withhold agreement to such an extension. The topics of such annual training should
include, but not be limited to:
a. the MPD databases (TraCS, RMS, and CAD) containing the information
identified in paragraph IV.A.3 on all traffic stops, field interviews, no-action
encounters, frisks, and searches;
b. what information about each traffic stop, field interview, no-action encounter,
as well as frisks and searches conducted in the course of those encounters,
must be documented in TraCS, RMS, and/or CAD;
c. documentation and reporting responsibilities of officers who conduct traffic
stops, field interviews, no-action encounters, frisks, and searches; and
d. how to retrieve data on traffic stops, field interviews, no-action encounters,
frisks, and searches from TraCS, RMS, and CAD in order to review encounter
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reports for evidence of compliance with constitutional standards, this
Agreement, and MPD policies concerning the conduct of traffic stops, field
interviews, no-action encounters, frisks, and searches.
3. All training materials developed and/or approved by Defendants to
comply with paragraphs IV.B.1 and IV.B.2 of this Agreement shall be provided to
Plaintiffs within six (6) months of the execution of this Agreement for review.
4. Plaintiffs shall:
a. review all training materials developed and/or approved by Defendants to
comply with paragraphs IV.B.1 and IV.B.2, and recommend any revisions
necessary to make such training more effective; and
b. observe training sessions identified in paragraph IV.B.2 to ensure that the
training complies with the requirements of this Agreement and promotes the
goals of lawful traffic stops, field interviews, no-action encounters, frisks, and
searches. Defendants shall provide the training calendar to Plaintiffs as soon
as it is available. Plaintiffs will make every effort to attend in-service training
sessions within the first two weeks and will do so no later than the first month
that such training is provided. Two observers on behalf of Plaintiffs shall be
allowed to observe any training related to this Agreement. In the event that an
observer witnesses and documents training that is not consistent with the
requirements of this Agreement, Plaintiffs are to bring any such deficiency to
the prompt attention of Defendants. Defendants shall then be allowed to
correct the erroneous training within three months. In the event that the
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Defendants fail to do this, Plaintiffs may seek a remedial order from the Court
and the Defendants shall be liable for all reasonable fees and expenses
connected to any such motion.
5. MPD shall have state-certified instructors, certified in the pertinent areas
and employed at the MPD Academy, provide the training and re-training of officers and
supervisors on the conduct, documentation, and supervision of traffic stops, field
interviews, no-action encounters, frisks, and searches.
C. Supervision
1. Within six (6) months of the execution of this Agreement, MPD shall
establish and enforce policies requiring continuous supervision of officers who conduct
traffic stops, field interviews, no-action encounters, frisks, and searches by appropriate,
specified officers within the MPD. Defendants shall provide for supervision in the
following manner and within the following timeframes:
a. All reports of arrests, which are documented in the RMS system, will be
reviewed and approved by a supervisor within the time period prescribed by
SOP 263–Records Management. The supervisor will review the reports for
various matters, including the lawful basis for any traffic stop or field
interview that led to the arrest, and the lawful basis for any frisk or search
conducted during the encounter.
b. Within twelve (12) months of the date of this Agreement, MPD will achieve a
practice of supervisory review, correction, and approval of 50% of all
documentation of field interviews in RMS consistent with the timeframes set
23
forth in SOP 085.20. Supervisors shall review for completeness, and shall
review the stated basis for the field interview and any frisk and/or search
conducted in the course of the field interview. Prior to approving reports for
submission to RMS, supervisors shall ensure that officers provide any missing
information to ensure all information required by paragraph IV.A.3 is
documented.
c. Within twelve (12) months of the date of this Agreement, MPD will achieve
supervisory review, correction, and approval of every warning and citation
issued by MPD officers in the course of a traffic stop or field interview, as
recorded in TraCS within seven (7) days, consistent with the timeframe set
forth in SOP 070. Supervisors shall review for completeness, and shall review
the stated basis for the traffic stop, field interview, and any frisk and/or search
conducted in the course of the traffic stop or field interview. Prior to
approving reports for submission to TraCS, supervisors shall ensure that
officers provide any missing information to ensure all information required by
paragraph IV.A.3 is documented.
d. Within twelve (12) months of the date of this Agreement, MPD shall achieve
supervisory review, correction, and approval of every no-action encounter
documented in CAD within fourteen (14) days. Supervisors shall review for
completeness and shall review the stated basis for the no-action encounter.
Prior to approving reports as complete, supervisors shall ensure that officers
24
provide any missing information to ensure all information required by
paragraph IV.A.3 is documented.
Defendants shall require MPD supervisors to use the aforementioned data to identify and
document any non-compliance by subordinate officers with constitutional standards and
policy guidelines concerning the conduct and documentation of traffic stops, field
interviews, no-action encounters, frisks, and searches, including SOP 085, SOP 070, SOP
001, SOP 300, and this Agreement.
2. Defendants shall require MPD supervisors to counsel, train, or to refer for
re-training, any officer who is found through supervisory review to have engaged in an
unreasonable, race-or ethnicity-based, unreported, or insufficiently documented traffic
stop, field interview, no-action encounter, frisk, or search. Retraining, when appropriate,
will be performed in accordance with SOP 082–Training and Career Development.
3. Defendants shall require MPD command staff to counsel, train, or to refer
for re-training, any supervisor (e.g., sergeant or lieutenant) who is found through
supervisory review to have failed to properly review and correct patrol officers who
conduct an unreasonable, race-or ethnicity-based, unreported, or insufficiently
documented traffic stop, field interview, no-action encounter, frisk, or search, or to
properly refer such officers to counseling, training, or re-training. Appropriately
qualified trainers from the Police Academy shall provide such re-training to the officer
within thirty (30) days of such a finding. Every six months, Internal Affairs will prepare
a report for command staff of allegations of policy violations described above and any
corrective actions taken.
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4. MPD will update the performance review process to ensure that it includes
matters relating to compliance with legal requirements concerning traffic stops, field
interviews, no-action encounters, frisks, and searches.
5. Defendants shall continue the changes to the purpose and content of
command staff meetings, including discussion and evaluation of community policing
measures.
6. MPD shall complete a twice per year community policing status report
and forward that report to the FPC.
D. Procedures for Complaints from Members of the Public and Internally Generated Complaints Concerning MPD Conduct
1. Defendants shall amend SOP 450 on Personnel Investigations in order to
improve procedures for initiating and investigating complaints from members of the
public and internally generated complaints about MPD conduct, including traffic stops,
field interviews, no-action encounters, frisks, and searches, and to foster transparency
concerning the subject matter of complaints, the process for investigating complaints, and
the resolution of complaints. Pursuant to these amendments:
a. Defendants shall make complaint forms for members of the public and
instructions describing the separate processes for filing complaints with the
MPD and FPC available in English, Spanish, Hmong, and other languages as
the Parties may determine appropriate;
b. Defendants shall continue to ensure that complaint forms for members of the
public and instructions are available for download from the MPD and FPC
26
websites and are available, at a minimum, at all Milwaukee public libraries
and police district stations;
c. Defendants shall accept all complaints received from members of the public,
whether submitted in person, by phone, by mail, or via email, or by any other
means, and will work to develop online submission via the MPD and/or FPC
websites to further facilitate the complaint process;
d. Defendants shall ensure that supervisors are trained on their responsibilities
under the new policy requiring acceptance of all complaints from members of
the public. Defendants shall ensure that all MPD and FPC staff who accept
complaints are trained not to, and in practice do not, discourage the filing of
any complaint from a member of the public;
e. Defendants shall not require that complaints from members of the public be
notarized, but may require verification of identity at some appropriate time in
the complaint proceedings, subsequent to an initial review of the complaint, to
ensure that a complaint is not being filed simply for harassment or other
similarly inappropriate reasons;
f. Defendants shall maintain MPD’s practice of requiring a supervisor to contact
the complainant pursuant to SOP 450.35(A)(1) and (2);
g. Defendants shall ensure that any Personnel Investigation stemming from a
civilian complaint shall involve an interview of the complainant and that the
interview will take place at a location other than police headquarters, provided
that the complainant can be located with reasonable efforts and, with respect
27
to the location, except as to any complainant who is in custody of law
enforcement authorities at the time of taking any such interview. If a person
wishes or voluntarily agrees to be interviewed at a police facility, the
interview may take place there.
h. MPD shall: (1) develop a protocol specifying an appropriate time frame for
investigations of complaints by members of the public to be completed, and
hold investigators and supervisors accountable for that time frame; (2) require
supervisory review and approval for investigations open beyond ninety (90)
days and every thirty (30) days thereafter; (3) develop specific guidelines and
a checklist of requirements, including requirements for case file contents and
the components of the investigative process; and (4) ensure that all plausible
complaints are investigated;
i. Defendants shall ensure that MPD Internal Affairs investigators undergo
training that addresses, and attempts to eliminate, biases in favor of police
officers and against civilian complainants that arise in the course of complaint
investigations; and
j. Defendants shall prohibit investigators from conducting investigations in a
manner that may reflect biases against complainants, including asking hostile
questions to complainants; applying moral judgments related to the dress,
grooming, income, life-style, or known or perceived criminal history of
complainants; giving testimony by officers greater weight than testimony by
complainants; providing summary reports that disadvantage complainants and
28
are unrelated to facts developed in the investigation; issuing complaint
dispositions that are not justified by the facts developed in the investigation;
recommending inconsistent discipline for officer misconduct.
2. MPD Internal Affairs investigators shall receive special training conducted
within one year from the execution of this Agreement in the investigation of complaints
by members of the public, including training on the amendments to SOP 450 required by
this Agreement. The training shall be conducted by a supervisor of Internal Affairs with
expertise in complaint investigation and shall be consistent with those provisions of this
Agreement that relate to this subject.
3. Defendants shall ensure that the MPD Internal Affairs Division:
a. Receives all complaints from members of the public for review and
determination for appropriate assignment; and
b. Reviews every internally generated complaint about MPD conduct.
4. Defendants shall ensure that the MPD:
a. Maintains and enforces its policies requiring that an MPD supervisor or a
member of the MPD Internal Affairs Division reviews and investigates every
plausible complaint;
b. Continues to maintain a database that includes all civilian and internally-
generated complaints concerning MPD conduct received by the MPD, which
includes for each complaint: the complainant’s name, address, and other
contact information; the complainant’s race and ethnicity; the date, time, and
location of the incident; the name of the officer who is the subject of the
29
complaint; and the nature of the complaint, including whether it concerns a
traffic stop, field interview, no-action encounter, frisk, and/or search, and/or
an allegation of racial or ethnic profiling;
c. Maintains a list of the number and outcome of complaints received against
each officer, regardless of the outcome of the complaint (which should be
readily accessible through the AIM system);
d. Maintains the practice of the Early Intervention Program providing notice to
captains of an individual officer receiving three or more complaints within a
ninety (90)-day period, and also provides notice to captains of any individual
officer receiving three (3) or more complaints over a rolling one year period;
and
e. Ensures that complaint data are tabulated by citywide, district, unit, and peer
groupings to help supervisors understand overall employee performance and
the specific factors at issue within their district to allow for active and
engaged supervision.
5. Defendants shall ensure that the FPC:
a. Maintains the FPC practice of investigating all plausible complaints from
members of the public submitted to it;
b. Reviews every internally generated complaint about MPD conduct;
c. Creates and maintains a database of complaints from members of the public
and internally-generated complaints about MPD conduct received by the FPC,
which includes for each complaint: the complainant’s name, address and other
30
contact information; the complainant’s race and ethnicity; the date, time, and
location of the incident; the name of the officer who is the subject of the
complaint; and the nature of the complaint, including whether it concerns a
traffic stop, field interview, no-action encounter, frisk, and/or search, and/or
an allegation of racial or ethnic profiling;
d. Maintains a list of the number of complaints received against each officer,
regardless of the outcome of the complaint; and
e. Provides to the Chief for further action, as discussed in this Agreement, the
name of any officer receiving more than the same number of complaints
within the same timeframe as set out in the Early Intervention Program, as
discussed in paragraph IV.D.4.d.
E. Audits
1. Defendant FPC shall audit data, dashboard camera footage, and body
camera footage on traffic stops, field interviews, no-action encounters, frisks, and
searches, every six (6) months to identify:
a. Officers who fail to conduct these encounters in compliance with
constitutional standards and principles set forth in this Agreement;
b. Officers who fail to properly document these encounters in accordance with
the terms of this Agreement;
c. Supervisors who fail to properly review subordinate officers’ reports to
identify officers who fail to conduct traffic stops, field interviews, no-action
encounters, frisks, and/or searches in compliance with constitutional standards
31
and this Agreement, or to ensure that the encounters are properly documented
in compliance with the terms of this Agreement; and
d. Supervisors who fail to require re-training and/or discipline for subordinate
officers who conduct unreasonable, unreported, or insufficiently documented
encounters.
2. In order to ensure that complaints from members of the public are
appropriately investigated, the FPC, including through the work of any retained
consultants, shall conduct an audit every six (6) months of: (a) complaints submitted by
members of the public to the MPD, and (b) complaints from members of the public to the
FPC.
3. Defendant FPC shall be permitted to spend funds appropriated by Defendant
Milwaukee to hire additional staff and/or employ experts or consultants to conduct the
audits described in paragraphs IV.E.1 and 2. The Consultant also shall review such
audits for accuracy and, if the Consultant concludes that the audits are incomplete or
inaccurate, conduct its own audits of these matters. In addition, the Consultant shall
provide training and technical assistance to Defendant FPC to develop the FPC’s capacity
to conduct such reviews and audits itself, in order to be able to fully and appropriately
exercise its oversight obligations.
4. Defendant FPC shall use audits to, inter alia, identify officers who need
additional training on traffic stop, field interview, no-action encounter, frisk, and search
policies and/or discipline for the conduct of unreasonable, unreported, or insufficiently
documented encounters. Defendants shall ensure that data and findings from the FPC
32
audits described in paragraphs IV.E.1. and IV.E.2 shall be incorporated into the MPD’s
AIM System, which is a database software program used to identify MPD member
performance for the purpose of evaluation.
5. Defendant FPC shall publish on its website, on a quarterly basis, data on
civilian complaints received, under investigation, or resolved during the previous quarter,
including the number of complaints from members of the public broken down by number
relating to traffic stops, field interviews, no-action encounters, frisks, and searches
without legal justification and traffic stops, field interviews, no-action encounters, frisks,
and searches based on race or ethnicity and whether the complaints remain open or have
been closed.
6. Defendants shall ensure that the appropriate division within MPD audits data,
dashboard camera footage, and body camera footage on traffic stops, field interviews, no-
action encounters, frisks, and searches every six (6) months to identify:
a. Officers who fail to conduct these activities in compliance with constitutional
standards and principles set forth in this Agreement;
b. Officers who fail to properly document these encounters in accordance with the
terms of this Agreement;
c. Supervisors who fail to properly review subordinate officers’ reports to identify
officers who fail to conduct traffic stops, field interviews, no-action
encounters, frisks, and searches in compliance with constitutional standards
and this Agreement, or to ensure that the encounters are properly documented
in compliance with the terms of this Agreement; and
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d. Supervisors who fail to require re-training and/or discipline for subordinate
officers who conduct unreasonable, unreported, or insufficiently documented
encounters.
7. Defendants shall ensure that the MPD Internal Affairs Division uses audits to,
inter alia, identify officers who need additional training on traffic stop, field interview,
no-action encounter, frisk, and search policies and/or discipline for the conduct of
unreasonable, unreported, or insufficiently documented encounters. Defendants shall
ensure that data and findings from the audits described in paragraphs IV.E.6 and IV.E.7
shall be incorporated into the MPD’s Early Intervention Program.
F. Counseling, Re-training, and Discipline
1. MPD will develop and maintain a system of benchmarks and alert
notification triggers for any employee involved in three incidents of traffic stops, field
interviews, no-action encounters, frisks, and searches that are insufficiently documented,
legally unsupported, or based on racial or ethnic profiling over a rolling one (1)-year
period.
2. Defendants understand that racial and ethnic profiling, and unlawful and
inadequately-documented traffic stops, field interviews, no-action encounters, and frisks
are a serious violation of the MPD rules and may subject the offending officer to
progressive discipline, including counseling, retraining, suspension, or discharge as
appropriate and consistent with the criteria of Wis. Stats. § 62.50.
3. Defendants shall ensure that discipline must occur when there is a
sustained allegation that any MPD officer has conducted a traffic stop, field interview,
34
no-action encounter, or frisk that lacks the requisite reasonable suspicion and/or is the
result of racial or ethnic profiling, or has failed to report or insufficiently document a
traffic stop, field interview, no-action encounter or frisk, with such disciplinary measures
progressing in severity as the number of such sustained violations increases. Nothing in
this agreement precludes imposition of greater or additional discipline when the Chief
determines such discipline is appropriate.
4. Defendants shall amend SOP 450 to confirm that the matters described in
paragraph IV.F.3 above are serious violations and to provide that any traffic stop, field
interview, no-action encounter, and/or frisk conducted without the requisite legal basis or
demonstrating an indication of racial or ethnic profiling shall be dealt with in a manner
that is consistent with the criteria of Wis. Stats. § 62.50 and paragraph IV.F.3 above.
5. MPD shall maintain those pertinent SOPs that require officers to adhere to
the laws of the United States, the state of Wisconsin, and the City of Milwaukee. MPD
shall through training make clear to its officers that among these responsibilities are the
responsibilities to conduct traffic stops, field interviews, no-action encounters, frisks and
searches in a lawful manner and that an officer who fails to do so may be subject to
appropriate measures, including counseling, additional training, discipline or discharge.
6. An MPD supervisor who fails to properly supervise a subordinate officer
to ensure that traffic stops, field interviews, no-action encounters, frisks, and searches
comply with constitutional standards, are properly reported, and are sufficiently
documented, including through the review of the subordinate officer’s electronic reports
concerning these encounters, may be subject to a Personnel Investigation and any
35
resulting counseling, retraining, and/or discipline, including the possibility of
termination.
7. Defendants shall require MPD supervisors to refer for investigation any
officer identified through supervisory review to have engaged in four or more traffic
stops, field interviews, no-action encounters, frisks, or searches that are unsupported by
the requisite reasonable suspicion or probable cause, are not properly reported, or are
insufficiently documented in a three-year period. Such investigation shall be conducted
by the MPD Internal Affairs Division, or by the commanding officer of the district, under
the supervision of the MPD Internal Affairs Division.
8. MPD shall maintain and enforce its Code of Conduct which provides that
officers can face discipline for failing to familiarize themselves with department policies
and also provides for progressive discipline; such enforcement will specifically include
instances where an officer has been found to have engaged in unlawful traffic stops, field
interviews, no-action encounters, frisks and/or searches; instances in which an officer has
failed to document properly traffic stops, field interviews, no-action encounters, frisks,
and/or searches; and instances in which a supervisor has failed to identify and refer for
counseling, retraining, or discipline officers who fail to comply with traffic stop, field
interview, no-action encounter, frisk, and search documentation and conduct
requirements set forth in this Agreement and in a manner that is consistent with the
criteria of Wis. Stats. § 62.50. The Defendants acknowledge that unlawful and
inadequately-documented traffic stops, field interviews, no-action encounters, frisks,
and/or searches are a serious violation of the MPD rules.
36
9. In determining the appropriate resolution and/or discipline to be imposed
following any Personnel Investigation, the number, nature, and resolution of civilian and
internally generated complaints against an officer shall be considered.
G. Community Engagement
1. Defendants shall ensure that the MPD monthly crime and safety meetings,
which MPD already conducts, will include on their agendas in all districts concerns, if
they are raised, about the MPD’s actions, including but not limited to policies and
practices concerning traffic stops, field interviews, no-action encounters, and frisks.
2. Defendants shall maintain the existing Milwaukee Collaborative
Community Committee to seek community input on police department operations to
improve trust between law enforcement and city residents. Defendants shall consult with
Plaintiffs regarding any changes in or additions to the membership of this group.
Defendants shall make reasonable efforts to ensure that the membership in this committee
represents racially and ethnically diverse communities, persons with disabilities, LGBTQ
persons, and other protected classes.
3. Any revision of MPD policies or written procedures relating to traffic
stops, field interviews, no-action encounters, frisks, and the enforcement of low-level
offenses shall be addressed in the manner prescribed by FPC Rule IV, Board Procedure, a
copy of which is attached hereto as Appendix C.
V. COMPLIANCE 1. To achieve compliance with this Agreement, the MPD must demonstrate
that it has:
37
a. incorporated all substantive requirements of this Agreement into policy;
b. hired and trained relevant personnel as necessary to fulfill their
responsibilities pursuant to the requirements;
c. appropriated sufficient funds to ensure that such requirements are met; and
d. shown sustained and continuing improvement in constitutional policing based
on:
i. analysis of TraCS data demonstrating that fewer than 14% of records of
traffic stops, frisks, and searches documented in TraCS during the
previous six (6) months are missing any of the information required by
paragraph IV.A.3 for inclusion in records;
ii. analysis of RMS data demonstrating that fewer than 14% of records of
field interviews, frisks, and searches documented in RMS during the
previous six (6) months are missing any of the information required by
paragraph IV.A.3 for inclusion in records;
iii. analysis of CAD data demonstrating that fewer than 14% records of no-
action encounters documented in CAD during the previous six (6)
months are missing any of the information required by paragraph IV.A.3
for inclusion in records;
iv. analysis of TraCS data on traffic stops demonstrates that fewer than 15%
of traffic stop records documented during the previous six (6) months
fail to show that the stops were supported by individualized, objective,
38
and articulable reasonable suspicion of criminal activity or a traffic or
vehicle equipment violation;
v. analysis of RMS data on field interviews demonstrates that fewer than
15% of field interview records documented during the previous six (6)
months fail to show that the field interviews were supported by
individualized, objective, and articulable reasonable suspicion of
criminal activity or a traffic or vehicle equipment violation;
vi. analysis of CAD data on no-action encounters demonstrates that fewer
than 15% of records documented during the previous six (6) months fail
to show that the traffic stops and encounters were supported by
individualized, objective, and articulable reasonable suspicion of
criminal activity or a traffic or vehicle equipment violation;
vii. analysis of TraCS and RMS data on frisks demonstrates that fewer than
15% of frisks records documented during the previous six (6) months
fail to show that the frisks were supported by individualized, objective,
and articulable reasonable suspicion that the stop subject was armed and
dangerous;
viii. analysis of TraCS data on traffic stops demonstrates that there is no
significant racial or ethnic disparity in the rate at which Black and white
people, and Latino and white people, are subjected to traffic stops after
controlling for agreed upon benchmarks;
39
ix. analysis of RMS data on demonstrates that there is no significant racial
or ethnic disparity in the rate at which Black and white people, and
Latino and white people, are subjected to field interviews after
controlling for agreed upon benchmarks; and
x. analysis of CAD data on no-action encounters demonstrates that there is
no significant racial or ethnic disparity in the rate at which Black and
white people, and Latino and white people, are subjected to no-action
encounters after controlling for agreed upon benchmarks.
Compliance must be maintained for the time periods set forth below with the sole
exception that Plaintiffs agree not to seek contempt sanctions should Defendants be
unable to meet the numerical thresholds identified above within the first two years of
enforcement of this Agreement. The parties agree, however, that Defendants shall work
towards meeting these numerical standards as quickly as possible. Non-compliance with
mere technicalities, or temporary or isolated failure to comply during a period of
otherwise sustained compliance, will not constitute failure to achieve or maintain full
compliance. At the same time, temporary compliance during a period of otherwise
sustained noncompliance will not constitute compliance with this Agreement.
2. The U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin shall retain
jurisdiction to enforce the terms of this Agreement and the Parties’ obligations hereunder.
3. In determining whether Defendants are in compliance with constitutional
standards concerning traffic stops, field interviews, no-action encounters, frisks, and
40
searches and with the terms of this Agreement, the Court may consider, among other
factors:
a. The number, nature, and location of traffic stops, field interviews, no-action
encounters, and frisks that do not comply with Fourth Amendment standards,
disaggregated by the race and ethnicity of the subject;
b. All information regarding the legal basis provided for traffic stops, field
interviews, no-action encounters, frisks, and searches, the resultant “hit-rates,”
including rates of contraband seizures, and information resulting from audits
and surveys conducted by the Parties;
c. Racial and ethnic disparities in stops, frisks, and searches, after accounting,
under professionally established statistical methods, for factors other than race
and ethnicity as described in paragraph V.A.5 below.
A. Role of the Consultant
1. The Consultant shall provide the Parties with a written Report on an
annual basis. The Report shall address Defendants’ compliance with the terms of this
Agreement based on: (a) the Consultant’s annual review of MPD and FPC actions to
determine whether they have timely completed tasks identified in this Agreement
pertaining to policy formulation, data collection and reporting, training, supervision, the
complaint process, discipline, and audits; (2) annual analysis of: MPD data on traffic
stops, field interviews, no-action encounters, and frisks, including encounter-level data
and aggregate data. Should the Consultant find that the Defendants are non-compliant
41
with any of the requirements of this Agreement, the Consultant shall submit a report
within six (6) months determining whether Defendants have rectified the issue(s).
2. In preparing any Report, the Consultant may solicit reports and input from
the Parties and community members through customary means of public notice employed
by the FPC, including its website and an opt-in email distribution list including members
of the public who are participating in the ongoing process, managed by the City, FPC,
and MPD, to elicit public input concerning MPD reforms related to the proposed
recommendations by the U.S. Department of Justice Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services. Nothing in this paragraph shall prohibit the Parties from providing
reports and input for the Consultant’s consideration and the Consultant shall consider any
such reports and input provided by the Parties when putting together a Report. Any
reports and input provided by the Parties to the Consultant shall be provided at the same
time to the opposing Party’s counsel.
3. To measure Defendants’ compliance with the Fourth Amendment in
conducting traffic stops, field interviews, no-action encounters, and frisks, the Consultant
will review randomly selected electronic incident reports concerning these encounters
documented pursuant to paragraphs IV.A.1–IV.A.3 on an appropriate basis, as
determined by the Consultant, but no less often than semiannually. The following
procedures will be used.
a. Defendants shall ensure that the randomly selected electronic incident reports
do not contain more than a single incident report concerning a particular
police-civilian encounter. Where multiple people are stopped and/or frisked
42
in one encounter, only one of these stops will be part of the randomly selected
files for review.
b. In each semi-annual review, the Consultant will screen the reported stops and
frisks to separate out (1) “stops” that are either arrests at the location of the
stop or are otherwise not forcible stops under the Fourth Amendment and (2)
“frisks” that are searches (often incident to arrest). In these cases, officers
have filed reports even though the incident was not within the definition of a
“traffic stop,” “field interview,” “no-action encounter,” or “frisk” as set forth
in this Agreement. These incidents will not be included in the Fourth
Amendment “reasonable suspicion” analysis.
c. The category of “fruit of an illegal stop” will be used to signify where a frisk,
though proper given the officer’s observations, was made pursuant to a traffic
stop or field interview conducted without reasonable suspicion.
d. The Consultant shall conduct an analysis involving the tabulation of “hits”
(i.e., the finding of weapons or contraband) to the number of frisks,
disaggregated by race and ethnicity.
e. There will be a designation of cases in which an officer marks “no frisk” and
“no search” in cases in which a frisk or search was highly likely to have
occurred (e.g., stop for a robbery investigation).
4. To measure Defendants’ compliance with the Fourteenth Amendment in
conducting traffic stops, field interviews, no-action encounters and frisks, the Consultant
will engage in several different analyses.
43
5. Regression Analysis Regarding Traffic Stops, Field Interviews, No-Action
Encounters, and Frisks: The Consultant will compare actual traffic stop, field interview,
no-action encounter and frisk rates by police district to those that would be expected
based on census data, or other similarly-reliable and available data, on the racial
composition for that police district. This analysis will use race-specific and ethnicity-
specific data comparing traffic stops, field interviews, no-action encounters, and frisks
and the census population by race and ethnicity. To determine the impact of suspect race
and suspect ethnicity on the likelihood of a traffic stop, field interview, no-action
encounter, or frisk, this analysis will control for factors that include the demography and
crime rates of the police district. A multivariate regression analysis will be used to assess
the relationship among multiple variables simultaneously. The following regressions will
be used, with the dependent variable of “rate of traffic stops, field interviews, no-action
encounters, and frisks”:
a. Subject race;
b. Subject race, Latino status;
c. Subject race, Latino status, sex;
d. Subject race, Latino status, sex, age;
e. Subject race, Latino status, sex, age, district racial composition;
f. Subject race, Latino status, sex, age, district racial composition, district age
composition;
g. Subject race, Latino status, sex, age, district racial composition, district age
composition, district employment rate;
44
h. Subject race, Latino status, sex, age, district racial composition, district age
composition, district employment rate, district crime rate;
i. Subject race, Latino status, sex, age, district racial composition, district age
composition, district employment rate, district violent crime rate; and
j. Subject race, Latino status, sex, age, district racial composition, district age
composition, district employment rate, district property crime rate.
6. Regression Analysis Regarding Reasonable Suspicion: The Consultant
shall conduct the same set of regressions described in paragraph V.A.5 where the
dependent variable is whether there was reasonable suspicion for the traffic stop, field
interview, no-action encounters, or frisk. Since this variable is available only for the
sample of the data that has been analyzed for reasonable suspicion pursuant to paragraph
V.A.3, it will contain a smaller number of observations than the regressions described
above in paragraph V.A.3.
7. Hit-Rate Analysis:
a. The Consultant shall conduct a hit-rate analysis to determine possible effects
of race and ethnicity in traffic stops, field interviews, and frisks. For example,
because individualized, objective, and articulable reasonable suspicion that a
person is armed and dangerous justifies a frisk, one type of hit rate that can be
calculated is the share of frisks that result in the discovery of a weapon being
discovered. If hit-rates (e.g., rate of weapons seizure) for white people are
higher than for Black people, there is a question as to whether the police are
45
employing different thresholds for reasonable suspicion to people of different
races.
b. The Consultant shall conduct hit-rate analysis at the police-district level to test
for the possibility that traffic stops, field interviews, or frisks may be higher
for all people in heavily minority neighborhoods. In this analysis, there will
be calculations of the police-district level traffic stop, field interview, and
frisk rates per rates of reported crimes to determine whether these ratios are
correlated with police-district racial demographics. The question in this
context is whether, for example, there is a possible racial effect of stop and
frisk practices if the crime rate in District One is five times the crime rate in
District Two, but the stop rate is 10 times higher in District One. Should the
Consultant determine that TraCS traffic crash data is to be considered in the
analysis following consultation with the Parties’ and their experts, such data
shall be provided by Defendants to the Consultant and Plaintiffs’ Counsel.
8. The following protocols will be followed in the regression analyses
described in paragraphs V.A.5 and V.A.6:
a. The police district will be the geographical areas for data analysis.
Defendants will provide Plaintiffs and the Consultant with the relevant police
district population data.
b. Crime rates will be measured by the incidence of crime per relevant
population (using lagged data, i.e., the crime rate from the previous Quarter or
Year).
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i. Defendants shall ensure that the Consultant and Plaintiffs’ counsel are
provided with crime data agreed upon by the Parties. At a minimum,
Defendants shall make available crime data for the preceding year,
including reported crimes, committed crimes, type of crime, police
district of crime, and suspect race if known.
c. Economic and social data will be used as controls. The Parties shall endeavor
to reach agreement about the economic and social factors used as controls. To
the extent that there are differences in the economic and social regression
factors used by each side, and to the degree there appear to be different
conclusions based on different factors, the Parties’ experts will determine
which are the most relevant and reliable.
d. The Consultant may perform “robustness” checks beyond the regression
analysis set forth above, and shall confer as to their usefulness.
e. The Consultant shall determine whether any differences in the racial and
ethnic data analyzed in paragraphs V.A.5 and V.A.6 are statistically
significant and meaningful.
i. If the effect of race or ethnicity is not statistically significant, it means
that the effect of race or ethnicity is lower than the ability of the
regression to detect. This relates to the power of the regression, which is
affected by the sample size. If the sample size is large enough, a
statistically insignificant coefficient indicates that the difference by race
is statistically indistinguishable from zero (i.e., no race effect) to a high
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degree of accuracy. Regression analysis provides measures for
determining statistically significant racial and ethnic disparities and in
the social sciences, the standard significance threshold for the likelihood
of finding the same result is 95%, which corresponds to a p-value of .05.
For some of the benchmarks, including analysis of gross rates of traffic
stops, field interviews, no-action encounters, and frisks with regression
for salient factors, there is no need for sampling as all of this data is
available in the electronic databases (TraCS, RMS, and CAD) described
in paragraph IV.A.1–6.
ii. Even if the coefficient on race or ethnicity is statistically
significant, the magnitude may be so small that it is not meaningful.
9. The Consultant shall issue the first Draft Report no later than 12 months
after entry of this Agreement, and this Draft Report shall address the period of the
preceding twelve (12) months.
a. The Parties shall have thirty (30) days to serve each other and the Consultant
with any objections to the Consultant’s Draft Report.
b. The Consultant shall have thirty (30) days to make any revisions to the Draft
Report following receipt of the Parties’ objections.
c. The parties and the Consultant will not make public any Draft Report during
the sixty (60)-day time period prescribed in paragraphs V.A.9.a. and V.A.9.b.,
above.
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d. The Consultant’s Final Report shall be filed with the Court and made publicly
available on the FPC website.
10. Defendants shall provide the Consultant with data, documents, analysis,
and information requested by the Consultant in the preparation of Reports, including, but
not limited to, electronic data on crime rates, police deployment, and MPD traffic stops,
field interviews, no-action encounters, and frisks, including all of the data identified in
paragraph IV.A.3.
11. The Consultant may seek the advice and assistance of police practices
experts and statistical experts in formulating the Reports. Defendants shall compensate
the Consultant for any experts retained by the Consultant for their professional services
and reasonable expenses.
VI. FEES AND COSTS
1. Defendant Milwaukee shall pay the reasonable costs and fees of the
Consultant.
2. Defendant Milwaukee shall pay reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs to
Plaintiffs’ counsel and their experts for time spent to date on investigating and litigating
this case. Counsel for Defendant Milwaukee agrees to recommend the payment of
$1,900,000 for the total amount of Plaintiffs’ reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs herein.
3. Any disputes over fees and costs, including the reasonableness thereof,
shall be submitted to the Court for adjudication in accordance with 42 U.S.C. § 1988.
VII. TIME PERIOD
1. Defendants shall comply with the terms of this Agreement for a minimum
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of five (5) years.
2. If Plaintiffs’ counsel finds or reasonably believes that any Defendant is not
in substantial compliance with any term of this Agreement, Plaintiffs’ counsel shall bring
the issue to the attention of Defendants’ counsel prior to filing a motion seeking
appropriate relief with the Court.
VIII. MISCELLANEOUS
1. Defendants agree to develop any comprehensive and agency-wide policies
and procedures that are necessary to ensure consistency with, and full implementation of,
this Agreement. Unless otherwise noted, Defendants agree that all policies, procedures,
and manuals shall be developed within six (6) months of the effective date.
2. No amendments of this Agreement will be valid unless made in writing
and signed by all of the signatories hereto.
3. This Agreement may be executed in duplicate counterparts, each of which
will be deemed an original, with the same effect as if the signatures thereto were on the
same instrument. Each signatory to the Agreement may execute this agreement by
telefax or email of a scanned copy of the signature page, which shall have the same force
and effect as if executed on an original copy.
4. The Parties further agree to cooperate fully and to execute any and all
supplementary documents and to take all additional actions that may be necessary or
appropriate to give full force and effect to the basic terms and intent of this Agreement.
5. If, after the date hereof, any provision of this Agreement is held to be
illegal, invalid, or unenforceable, the remaining provisions shall continue in full force and
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effect.
6. It is the intent of the signatories that no part of this Agreement is to be
presumptively construed either against or in favor of any signatory because of the identity
of the drafter.
7. Paragraph headings contained herein are for purposes of organization only
and do not constitute a part of this Agreement.
8. Any communications or notices to be provided to legal counsel for the
Parties pursuant to this Agreement will be sent in writing via email or addressed, via
commercial overnight delivery service, to the attention of the persons identified below (or
as the signatories may subsequently direct in writing).
This Agreement constitutes the entire agreement and understanding between and
among the signatories with respect to the subject matter hereof and supersedes all other
prior or contemporaneous oral agreements, understandings, undertakings and negotiations
of the Parties.
It is so agreed.
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7-11-18 Date
Counsel for Plaintiffs:
_________________________________________ 7-12-18 Nusrat J. Choudhury Date American Civil Liberties Union Foundation 125 Broad Street, 17th Floor New York, NY 10004 Tel. (212) 519-7876 [email protected] _________________________________________ 7-12-18 Jason Williamson Date American Civil Liberties Union Foundation 125 Broad Street, 17th Floor New York, NY 10004 Tel. (212) 549-7340 [email protected] ________________________________________ 7-13-18 Karyn L. Rotker Date American Civil Liberties Union of Wisconsin Foundation 207 East Buffalo Street, Suite 325 Milwaukee, WI 53202 Tel. (414) 272-4032
Covington & Burling LLP 850 Tenth Street, NW Washington, DC 20001 Tel. (202) 662-6515 [email protected]
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Approved and ORDERED by the Court. __________________________________________ The Honorable Joseph P. Stadtmueller Date United States District Judge
APPENDIX A
APPENDIX B
APPENDIX C